So you woke up on Monday and thought, “What could be crazier than Seattle’s decision to pass instead of having Marshawn Lynch bulldoze, tank, plow his way to a Super Bowl title?”

And then you looked at the NBA scoreboard.

The Hawks’ 19-game winning streak ended, just when you thought they would never lose again. Then the Nets won at home, just when you thought they would never win in Brooklyn again, beating the Clippers, a real, live, honest-to-goodness above-.500 team. The Nets endured an 0-7 home January.

Plus, Monday represented the first time the Nets rallied from 10 points down with under 6:00 left (they trailed by 11 with 5:16 left) since Oct. 27, 2010.

Is there nothing left to have faith in? Well, at least you could count on Toronto and Washington to win at home Monday against Milwaukee and Charlotte, respectively? Yeah, same as you counted on Seattle to run.

Blake Griffin is guarded by Brook Lopez during the Clippers’ road loss to the Nets.Paul J. Bereswill

“It was crazy,” said Jarrett Jack, who delivered the Nets’ game-winning shot against Clippers coach Doc Rivers and his staff populated by former local guys Mike Woodson and Lawrence Frank. “I wasn’t having my best shooting night.”

He hit the one that mattered. Crazy. Almost as crazy as Atlanta’s recent run, which included the NBA’s first perfect 17-0 month (January).

While the Hawks have commanded so much attention — and rightfully so — the Pelicans have won six of seven and are chasing down the eighth spot out West.

“We just need to continue what we’ve been doing,” said Anthony Davis, who scored 29 points and grabbed 13 rebounds to help snuff the Hawks.

This week’s power rankings:

1. Atlanta Hawks (40-9) (Last week: 1)

Stay at top despite loss to Pelicans — their first since Dec. 26. Hawks have a true test upcoming: vs. Wizards (Wednesday), vs. Warriors (Friday) and at Memphis (Sunday). Warriors game will be great 1-vs.-2 game.

2. Golden State Warriors (37-8) (2)

Have lost two of three, before starting a hellacious run of 12 of 14 games on road when they visit Kings Tuesday, then come home for Mavs on Wednesday. After scalper’s dream game Friday in Atlanta, Knicks see what the fuss is about Saturday.

3. Memphis Grizzlies (36-12) (3)

Have won seven straight and 11 of 12. They are 11-2 since Zach Randolph returned after missing nine games (they went 4-5) with a sore knee. Z-Bo has a double-double in all 13 games since return. Wow, imagine if he played in New York …

Warriors point guard Stephen CurryAP

4. Cleveland Cavaliers (30-20) (10)

Have won 11 straight. They have LeBron James. Kyrie Irving was Eastern Player of the Week. Ho hum. “We haven’t done anything, we haven’t earned anything,” James said. “The title is the ultimate goal.”

5. San Antonio Spurs (30-18) (4)

Gregg Popovich is just three wins from becoming the ninth NBA coach with 1,000 victories. He’s in his 19th season with the Spurs — or five years longer than Belichick with the Patriots.

6. Houston Rockets (33-15) (6)

Have endured games without Dwight Howard, going 11-5 when the center sits. But Howard is out indefinitely with an ailing right knee.

7. Los Angeles Clippers (33-16) (5)

Came to Brooklyn Monday and gave a tribute to former Net Chris Dudley, shooting 8-of-25 (32.0) at foul line. Yeah, they lost.

8. Toronto Raptors (33-16) (12)

Maybe the first time in team history back-to-back overtime road wins Friday (over Nets) and Saturday (over Wizards) took their toll. Raptors went home and lost to Bucks, ending six-game winning streak, Monday.

9. Dallas Mavericks (33-17) (8)

Rajon Rondo was expected to miss at least three games after he suffered a couple facial fractures, including the left orbital bone, on Saturday. Then Devin Harris injured his leg on Monday. No worries there, though. Mavs were playing Minnesota.

10. Portland Trail Blazers (32-16) (7)

Have lost eight of 10, including last three. One major concern has been Damian Lillard’s shooting. He has not shot 50 percent in a game since Jan. 16, going 50-of-161 (31.1) in eight games since.

John Wall of the WizardsNBAE via Getty Images

11. Phoenix Suns (28-22) (13)

The streaky Suns lost their second in a row, which came after winning two, which came after losing two, which … well, you get the idea. On Monday, they blew a seven-point lead in the last 1:45 against Memphis.

12. Washington Wizards (31-18) (9)

Have all sorts of problems. John Wall is battling migraines and a bum ankle. Marcin Gortat is slumping. They’ve lost four straight at home. Worst of all: “We don’t play hard anymore,” coach Randy Wittman said after Monday’s loss to Charlotte.

13. Chicago Bulls (30-19) (11)

After a 10-5 November and an 11-4 December, Bulls stumbled through a depressing, injury-slammed 8-9 January. Tom Thibodeau’s club, once known for its defense, is just 18th in points allowed.

14. New Orleans Pelicans (26-22) (14)

Showed that with Anthony Davis, they can beat anybody. Davis returned from a groin strain Monday and had a 29-13 double-double to end Hawks’ 19-game win streak.

15. Milwaukee Bucks (26-22) (16)

Finished a nine-point fourth quarter against Raptors in Toronto on Monday with just eight healthy players (Brandon Knight, quad injury, scratched before game; O.J. Mayo ejected). They still won their fourth straight.

16. Oklahoma City Thunder (24-24) (15)

To a man, the Thunder feel they can get it together for playoff run. But Kevin Durant has to stay healthy. He sat Monday, again out with sprained toe. So Russell Westbrook fashioned a triple-double. “My job is to stay in attack mode,” Westbrook said.

Anthony Davis of the PelicansNBAE via Getty Images

17. Charlotte Hornets (21-27) (17)

After 10-4 January, Hornets kept rolling by beating the suddenly very mortal Wizards. Marvin Williams returned after missing two games with a concussion. Hornets picking up slack of losing Kemba Walker to knee surgery.

18. Miami Heat (21-26) (18)

Hassan Whiteside may be the greatest thing to hit fantasy leagues since the realization that no one ever pays taxes on winnings.

19. Detroit Pistons (18-30) (19)

Lost four straight games — including the first three after Brandon Jennings tore his Achilles. Then Josh Smith visited with the Rockets and Detroit won. Come back now, Josh.

20. Utah Jazz (17-30) (21)

Pulled a shocker on Friday, romping over Warriors. Derrick Favors (15.7 ppg, 8.5 rpg) collected five of his 14 double-doubles in January.

21. Brooklyn Nets (19-28) (23)

Deron Williams returned Monday and Nets posted their first home win of 2015. He had been out since suffering fractured rib cartilage Jan. 7. He scored 15 points.

22. Sacramento Kings (17-29) (24)

They stink. But DeMarcus Cousins is an All-Star, named to replace injured Kobe Bryant. He is Kings’ first All-Star since 2004.

23. Denver Nuggets (19-29) (22)

Used to roll at home. This season: They’re 12-13. At home against the East, a spot in which they once were all but invincible, Nuggets are 5-5. Add nine losses in 10 games overall and you see what all the non-excitement is about.

24. Indiana Pacers (17-32) (25)

They’re 2-10 in games decided by three points or less. Those 10 losses are NBA high. They’ve won two of three overall — a streak that comes after seven straight losses.

25. Boston Celtics (16-30) (20)

Celtics are 25th in points allowed, 17th in shooting, 24th in 3-point shooting. And they’re just four games behind the eighth playoff spot. Is the East zany or what?

26. New York Knicks (10-38) (28)

OK, it is not quite the Fab Five, but Knicks have gone 5-1 with the lineup of Langston Galloway, Jose Calderon, Carmelo Anthony, Lou Amundson and Jason Smith. Six games together are the most for any of their starting units.

27. Orlando Magic (15-36) (26)

Victor Oladipo played Monday and scored 22 points after sitting a game with a sore Achilles. But main noise around Orlando is rumored demise of coach Jacque Vaughn. Some predict an All-Star-break axing.

28. Philadelphia 76ers (10-39) (29)

Michael Carter-Williams had a career-low two points in Monday’s loss in Cleveland. A sore shin kept him on the bench for entire second half.

29. Los Angeles Lakers (13-35) (27)

There was some worry among fans in LA the Lakers would beat Knicks Sunday. But that was quickly dispelled. The Lakers’ draft pick is top five protected. Otherwise, it goes to Phoenix.

30. Minnesota Timberwolves (8-40) (30)

It’s just nice knowing there’s a team left that still could break the all-time worst record of 9-73. But Ricky Rubio returned Monday. He was out since he sprained his ankle Nov. 7.